Impact of soman and acetylcholine on the effects of propofol in cultured cortical networks.

Impact of soman and acetylcholine on the effects of propofol in cultured cortical networks. Toxicol Lett. 2020 Jan 16;: Authors: Drexler B, Seeger T, Worek F, Thiermann H, Antkowiak B, Grasshoff C Abstract Patients intoxicated with organophosphorous compounds may need general anaesthesia to enable mechanical ventilation or for control of epileptiform seizures. It is well known that cholinergic overstimulation attenuates the efficacy of general anaesthetics to reduce spontaneous network activity in the cortex. However, it is not clear how propofol, the most frequently used intravenous anaesthetic today, is affected. Here, we investigated the effects of cholinergic overstimulation induced by soman and acetylcholine on the ability of propofol to depress spontaneous action potential activity in organotypic cortical slices measured by extracellular voltage recordings. Cholinergic overstimulation by co-application of soman and acetylcholine (10 µM each) did not reduce the relative inhibition of propofol (1.0 µM; mean normalized action potential firing rate 0.49 ± 0.06 of control condition, p < 0.001, Wilcoxon signed rank test) but clearly reduced its efficacy. Co-application of atropine (10 nM) did not improve the efficacy. Propofol preserved its relative inhibitory potential but did not produce a degree of neuronal depression which can be expected to assure hypnosis in humans. Since a combination with atropine did not impr...
Source: Toxicology Letters - Category: Toxicology Authors: Tags: Toxicol Lett Source Type: research